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What Dell is really doing here is building the equivalent of a secondary Asus Eee PC into a full-featured, full-size laptop. The Latitude On feature uses a low-power Intel ARM processor, flash storage and Linux (SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 10) separate from the laptop's main CPU, hard drive and Windows operating system. But unlike a subnotebook, the Latitude On system won't allow you to install applications. It's essentially a "cloud computing" device that depends on the Internet for much of its functionality.
ON's custom Web browser is based on Firefox. E-mail, "diary" and contacts are, of course, non-Microsoft applications. But some Microsoft data types are supported in one way or another. The system, for example, includes viewers for Microsoft Office documents (as well as for Adobe PDF documents). The built-in organizer grabs the 100 most recent Outlook e-mail messages from the laptop's cache and displays them.
From a Microsoft perspective, Latitude ON represents a debacle comparable to the UMPC disaster. Microsoft led a big push to drive sales of Vista -based Ultra-Mobile PCs, all of which failed catastrophically in the market, rejected by users in favor of first Linux-, then XP-based subnotebooks.
Now, it's happening again. Remember Windows Vista Sideshow? The feature was part of a broader effort by Microsoft to provide basic functionality on laptops while the main Windows OS was in sleep mode. A tiny screen on the lid would display the UI. Obviously that failed, and now partner Dell is delivering roughly similar but vastly superior functionality using Linux and other non-Microsoft software.
Based on all the information released so far, there is literally no downside (other than marginal additional cost).
The usefulness of these technologies stands in stark contrast to Microsoft Windows' ongoing slumber. When is the last time Microsoft rolled out something that boosted mobility the way these new features do?
The "old Microsoft" would have never allowed all this. The company would have leveraged its multi-billion dollar labs to figure all this out first, then, coerced Intel, Dell and the rest of the industry into supporting it. Now, Microsoft is on the sidelines while its closest partners innovate using companies that compete with Microsoft in the software marketplace.
When will Microsoft itself wake up from "sleep mode"?
malagent
Hutchinson, Kansas, United States
abrudtkuhl
Des Moines, Iowa, United States
mchawk
Maidenhead, United Kingdom
Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (14)
at 04:14 on August 19th, 2008
mchawk, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 05:52 on August 19th, 2008
Hi Marcel - thanks for the flag
at 06:24 on August 19th, 2008
mchawk, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 07:25 on August 19th, 2008
mchawk, I like this story. It's good stuff. Microsoft operating systems are good but there is much room for improvement. Many independent applications knock spots off M.S.applications i.e. add/remove programs installer which is basic and does not take out much of the junk that's left behind. I would prefer windows to be just the basic operating system without the rest which is better by independents and would lower the price.
at 16:38 on August 19th, 2008
mchawk, I like this story. It's good stuff.
Thanks for passing this on. It is mui appreciated.
at 18:02 on August 19th, 2008
mchawk, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 19:44 on August 19th, 2008
mchawk, I like this story. It's good stuff. Very interesting & innovative project.
at 19:57 on August 19th, 2008
=)
at 22:28 on August 19th, 2008
I'm a mac person don't really care about dell or MS, but couldn't Microsoft ship a stripped down version of Vista for ultra portable laptops.
at 01:02 on August 20th, 2008
Dell Latitude 7500 - Built with Windows in mind about 10 years ago- I used this laptop for a while but eventually moved back to a desktop. Can't wait to see this story develop!
www.daz4590.co.uk/wordpress
daz4590 has contributed a photo to this story.
at 02:20 on August 20th, 2008
..."Microsoft operating systems are good," - excuse me ?
at 02:21 on August 20th, 2008
mchawk, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 08:51 on August 20th, 2008
On the photo is my son's gaming PC with Windows XP.
The rest of the family uses Ubuntu Linux and occasionally Windows in virtual environment (kvm).
I'm a Linux person. Started with pre-2.0 kernels.
spinl0ck has contributed a photo to this story.
at 09:07 on October 9th, 2008
I love Windows and it's virus, you can't imagine how much I miss them since I've moved into a Mac.
Macs are too clean, too organized, there is nothing messing around with my files, the risk of opening a file with nasty virus that destroy my computer doesn't exist anymore.
Oh Windows, where are you and your virus, where are your blue screens... the world would never be the same without you.